Japanese Documentary Film to 1946. Committee: Michael Renov (Chair), Marsha Kinder, Gordon Berger
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MARKUS NORNES Department of Screen Arts and Cultures & Department of Asian Languages and Cultures & School of Art & Design University of Michigan North Quad 6F, 105 S. State St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1608 Phone: 734-647-2094 FAX: 734-936-1846 [email protected] EDUCATION • May 1996 Ph.D, Division of Critical Studies, School of Cinema/Television, University of Southern California. Dissertation: Forest of Pressure — Japanese Documentary Film to 1946. Committee: Michael Renov (chair), Marsha Kinder, Gordon Berger. • May 1990 Master of Arts, Division of Critical Studies, School of Cinema/Television, University of Southern California. • May l986 Bachelor of Arts, Cinema Studies, Paracollege, St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN. WORK EXPERIENCE TEACHING • 1996-present Professor of Asian Cinema. Department of Film, Television and Media Studies, Department of Asian Languages and Cultures, School of Art & Design; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. Graduate seminars: Chinese and Japanese Cinema; Film and TV Historiography; Narration and Discipline in Asian Studies (team- taught); Documentary; Japanese Film Theory and Criticism. Undergraduate courses: International Film History; Film Theory; Asian Cinema; Japanese Cinema; Documentary; Dialogue of Violence: Cinema in WWII’s Pacific Theater; Documentary in Theory and Practice (team-taught); Modern Empire in Pacific-Asia (team- taught); Fascist Cinema (team-taught); Anime; Cinema Babel: Subtitling & Dubbing Practicum. • 2017-2018 Visiting Professor. Waseda University, Tokyo. • 2015 Visiting Professor. Josai University, Tokyo: two courses, East Asian film style and documentary. • 2014-2015 Visiting Professor, Tokyo University (via Fulbright Fellowship). • 2009-2014 Chair, Department of Screen Arts and Cultures. • 2011 Visiting Professor, State Institute for Innovations in the Studies of Journalism, Communication and Mediated Society, Fudan University, Shanghai. • 2008-2009 Edwin O. Reischauer Visiting Professor of Japanese Studies, Harvard University. • 2004-2005 Visiting Professor, Waseda University (via Japan Foundation Fellowship). • 2002-2004 Asian Languages and Cultures Associate Chair, University of Michigan • 1999-2000 Visiting Professor, Meiji Gakuin University (via Fulbright Scholars Fellowship). • 1996 Lecturer, History of International Cinema Course — Post WWII: Vanderbilt University, TN (Spring semester). • 1995 Lecturer, History of Japanese Cinema Course: Colby College, Waterville, ME. • 1993 Teaching Assistant, Introduction to Cinema Course: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA. • 1989-1990, 1992 Head Teaching Assistant, International Cinema Course: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA. CURATORIAL/EXHIBITION: • 1990-1996, 2002-2005, 20012-2013 Coordinator, Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival, Tokyo, Japan. (Participate in overall design and realization of this international film festival; consultant from 1996-2002.) • 1988 Research Intern, Hawai’i International Film Festival: East-West Center, Honolulu, HI. (Conducted research and assisted director.) • 1981-82 Assistant Manager: Mann National Theater, Westwood, Los Angeles, CA and also Fort Collins, CO. CURRENT RESEARCH: • A History of Contemporary Japanese Documentary. • Japanese Film Theory and Criticism Reader (co-edited with A. A. Gerow and Iwamoto Kenji). • Calligraphy in East Asian Cinema. • Biography of Donald Richie. 8/22/18— 1 MARKUS NORNES FILMS: • The Big House (documentary, co-directed, co-produced with Soda Kazuhiro and Terri Sarris, et al.; 119 min., 2018); Berlin Critics’ Week (2018), Ann Arbor Film Festival (24 March 2018), Freep Film Festival (April 2018), Cinetopia (June 2018), Montreal Film Festival (November 2018); nationwide theatrical distribution in Japan (starting summer 2018). • The Player Played (5-screen video installation, 7 min., 2017); UM Bicentennial (May 2017). • Winger—47° 32’9”N 95° 59’14”W (documentary, 75 min., 2010). • 911 (experimental film, 43 min., 2001). https://youtu.be/4iD4IN7H2js PUBLICATIONS: BOOKS (AS AUTHOR): • Brushed in Light: Calligraphy in East Asian Cinema (under peer review at the University of Michigan Press; includes an online corpus of 2,500 images). • Staging Memories: Hou Hsiao-hsien's City of Sadness, with Yeh Yueh-yu (Ann Arbor: UM Maize Publishing, 2015—paper version, web version and iBooks enhanced, interactive version; http://www.publishing.umich.edu/publications/maize- books/staging-memories/). • A Research Guide to Japanese Film Studies, with A. A. Gerow (Ann Arbor, MI: UM Center for Japanese Studies Publications Program, 2009); thoroughly updated version in Japanese translation: Nihon Eiga Kenkyu e no Gaidobukku (Tokyo: Yumani, 2016). • Cinema Babel: Translating Global Cinema (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2007). • Forest of Pressure: Ogawa Shinsuke and Postwar Japanese Documentary (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2007); currently being translated into Chinese by Fudan University Press; Chapter 1 being translated for a Polish book. • Japanese Documentary Film: The Meiji Era Through Hiroshima (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003). BOOKS/EXHIBITION CATALOGS/REPRINTS (AS EDITOR AND/OR CO-EDITOR): • Nihon Senzen Eiga-ronshu—Eiga Riron no Saihakken [Rediscovering Classical Japanese Film Theory—An Anthology], (Tokyo: Yumani Shobo, 800-page reader forthcoming in Fall 2018). As co-editor with Iwamoto Kenji and Aaron Gerow. • Digital reprint of “Suzuki Seijun Problem Collection,” with a critical introduction by Michael Arnold (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, forthcoming). As editor. • Film Section of the Amerika Bunka Jiten [Dictionary of American Culture] (Tokyo: Maruzen Shobo, 2018). As co-editor with Ikui Eiko. • Hallyu 2.0: The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2015). As co-editor with Sangjoon Lee. • The Pink Book: The Japanese Eroduction and its Contexts (New Haven: Kinema Club, 2014). As editor. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/107423 • Digital reprint of David Bordwell, Ozu and the Poetics of Cinema (1988), with a new introduction by the author, color, and new scans of all images (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, 2007). As editor. 8/22/18— 2 MARKUS NORNES • Digital reprint of Noël Burch, To the Distant Observer (1979), with a new introduction by Harry Harootunian (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, 2004). As editor. • Digital reprint of “Prewar Proletarian Film Movements Collection” (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, 2004). As co-editor and co-author of detailed annotations with Makino Mamoru. Contents include: monographs: Eiga to Shihonshugi, Puroretaria Eiga no Chishiki, Puroretaria Eiga Undô no Tenbô, Puroretaria Eiga Nyûmon, Puroretaria Eiga no Tame ni, Puroretaria Eiga Undô Riron; journals (near complete runs): Eiga no Eiga, Eiga Kaihô, Eiga Kôjô, Puroretaria Eiga, Shinkô Eiga, Puroretaria Eiga, Purokino, Eiga Kurabu, Eiga Dôkôkai, Eiga Totsugekitai, Eichô; films (in quicktime): Yamamoto Senji kokubetsushiki, Yamasen Watamasa rô-nô-sô, Tochi, Dai junikai Tokyo Mê Dê, Zensen, Supôtsu; and posters, newsletters and leaflets from the censors’ office. • Digital reprint of Donald Richie, Japanese Cinema: Film Style and National Character (1971), with a new introduction by the author (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, 2004). As editor. • Digital reprint of “Production Materials from The Effects of the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Ann Arbor: Center for Japanese Studies Electronic Publications, 2004). As editor and author of detailed annotations for original script, memorandum, letters and financial records. • In Praise of Film Studies: Essays in Honor of Makino Mamoru (Victoria: Trafford / Kinema Club, 2001). As co-editor with Aaron Gerow and contributor. • Den'ei Nanahenge: Seven Transfigurations in Electric Shadows (Tokyo: Cinematrix, 1995). As co-editor, co-writer of catalog for Yamagata Film Festival program on the centenary of cinema. • The Japan/America Film Wars: World War II Propaganda and Its Cultural Contexts (New York: Harwood Academic Publishers, 1994). English book version of Media Wars: Then & Now. • In Our Own Eyes (Tokyo: Cinematrix, 1993). As co-editor of six bilingual catalogs and a Japanese language poster/pamphlet. • Nichibei Eigasen [Japan/America Film War], (Tokyo: Seikyûsha, 1992). Japanese-language book version of Media Wars: Then & Now. • Media Wars: Then & Now (Tokyo: Cinematrix, 1991). Co-edited, co-wrote, and laid out bilingual catalog for the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival. ARTICLES (BOOK CHAPTERS AND CATALOG ARTICLES): • “Repatriation: A Very Personal Division,” in Rediscovering Korean Cinema, ed. Sangjoon Lee (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, forthcoming). • “Atogaki—Shisen ni taishite no Shisen” [Afterword: A View on a View], in Soda Kazuhiro, The Big House: Amerika o Toru [The Big House: Shooting America], (Tokyo: Iwanami, 2018), 237-245. • “The Hand that Wrote Everything Visible is Empty: The Traces Left by Matsumoto Toshio,” Sputnik (October 2017), 28-30. • “’Ranyôteki Jimaku no Tame ni’ Saikô” [Afterthoughts on “For an Abusive Subtitling], Honyaku Tsuyaku Kenkyû no Chihei (Tokyo: Kôyô Shobo, 2017), 2-48. • “Teaching Audio Visual Translation,” in Teaching Translation: Programs, Courses, Pedagogies, ed. Lawrence Venuti (London: Routledge, 2016), 102-109. • “Marking the Body: The Axiographics of the Visible Hidden Camera,”